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schoolmaster
[ skool-mas-ter, -mah-ster ]
noun
- a man who presides over or teaches in a school.
- anything that teaches or directs:
Life can be a harsh schoolmaster.
- a snapper, Lutjanus apodus, a food fish found in Florida, the West Indies, etc.
verb (used with or without object)
- to teach or direct in the capacity of schoolmaster.
schoolmaster
/ ˈskuːlˌmɑːstə /
noun
- a man who teaches in or runs a school
- a person or thing that acts as an instructor
- a food fish, Lutjanus apodus, of the warm waters of the Caribbean and Atlantic: family Lutjanidae (snappers)
verb
- to be a schoolmaster
Derived Forms
- ˈschoolˌmastership, noun
- ˈschoolˌmasterly, adjective
- ˈschoolˌmastering, noun
- ˈschoolˌmasterish, adjective
Other Words From
- schoolmaster·ship noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of schoolmaster1
Example Sentences
He’s presenting as one of those British schoolmaster guys, he’s playing up to that type.
He frisked him to make sure he was unarmed and, like a schoolmaster taking a disobedient student by the collar, marched him away from the barn.
Her mother was born the daughter of a Methodist schoolmaster but was orphaned and taken in by a Muslim man who prayed five times a day.
He conceived the “The Wall,” a narrative rock opera released in 1979, that would foreground his anti-authority reflexes, from schoolmasters to heads of state; he has performed it against the backdrop of the Berlin Wall.
A former schoolmaster who, because of a small inheritance, has been able to retire to the country, Hopkins is vain, envious of others, accustomed to his domestic comforts and utterly self-centered.
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